(CNN)In war-torn Syria, a baby girl was a victim of the country's civil war before she was even born.
The newborn is named Amel, or "Hope," because of what she has survived in her first days of life in Aleppo. She came into this world bearing a scar of war on her forehead.

Her story is a tragic illustration of a human toll of a war that has claimed tens of thousands of lives and pushed millions of others to flee. As European leaders deal with an influx of migrants and refugees flowing through their borders, Amel's story provides the explanation for why the mass migration is happening.

An airstrike, allegedly by government forces, on September 18 damaged several homes in a residential area of Aleppo, including the home where a woman named Amira and her children live, witnesses and doctors told CNN.

Amira, who was nine months pregnant, and three of her children were injured in the attack and taken to a nearby hospital, the witnesses said.
When Amira arrived at the hospital, "she looked sad and confused," Mashfa al Midani Hospital spokesman Abu Louie told CNN.

Her children had minor injuries, but Amira suffered shrapnel wounds on her face and body, the spokesman said.

"She was surrounded by her three wounded kids, (and) she was bleeding from several parts of her body including her belly," he said.

Fearing for the survival of the mother and the child in her womb, doctors decided to do an emergency C-section.

What the doctors couldn't have imagined when they delivered the baby was this: a piece of shrapnel lodged in the newborn's forehead, just above her left eye.

The shrapnel had pierced the mother's belly and the womb, doctors told CNN. The surgeons removed the shrapnel from the baby's forehead.
"We don't know if the baby girl saved her mother from this shrapnel or the mother saved her baby" a doctor told CNN, "but we all know that the devilish regime tried to kill them both."

A video of the surgery was posted on Facebook, showing surgeons performing the C-section. Once the baby was born and took her first crying breaths, a doctor can be heard off camera saying, "This is the shrapnel. God willing, the baby is in a good condition.

The video shows an open wounds just above her left eye where the shrapnel was.
"Praise be to God, God is greater than Bashar" the surgeon says, referring to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

"She wasn't even born, and she was targeted," said Dr. Mohammed Tabbaa, who works directly with the doctors who performed the surgery. "I mean, that's the situation. I'm hoping she'll have a better future."

Tabbaa runs SEMA Syria Expatriate Medical Association.

An anesthesiologist described the terrified, bloody and bruised pregnant woman coming into the operating room.

"Shells are daily thing -- they've killed women, children and the elderly," the anesthesiologist said. "This shows the desperation of the situation."
Hospitals in danger
Though doctors in Aleppo saved the lives of mother and child, they said there is fear that the al-Assad regime will target hospitals and medical personnel, as they have in the past.

CNN obtained this photo of an underground hospital in an undisclosed location in Syria
CNN obtained this photo of an underground hospital in an undisclosed location in Syria
Airstrikes on hospitals in Syria have resulted in some medical facilities being moved underground.
Photos obtained by CNN of one underground medical facility in an undisclosed location showed a space that resembles a normal, but very basic, hospital room. The hallways, however, are bare tunnels or tunnels with some flooring and shelves in place.

Tabaa said moving hospital facilities underground costs around half a million dollars, but that the war necessitates it. He said he hopes more hospitals can be moved to safety underground.

"We know there's atrocities all over," Tabaa said, "but at least we can reduce the damage."

__________________
America is just the country that shows how all the written guarantees in the world for freedom are no protection against tyranny and oppression of the worst kind. There the politician has come to be looked upon as the very scum of society - Peter Kropotkin

The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to icheerthebull For This Useful Post:

Im not sure of the exact time any of this happened but I strongly believe that while those doctors were saving a child you were typing moo slum moo slum in the comment section of some media outlet.

__________________
America is just the country that shows how all the written guarantees in the world for freedom are no protection against tyranny and oppression of the worst kind. There the politician has come to be looked upon as the very scum of society - Peter Kropotkin

The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to icheerthebull For This Useful Post:

That is amazing they saved the baby. There is no way I would bring kids in to the world if I lived over there. I realize it may not be the choice for some women but I would do everything I could to avoid it if I could. I do feel sorry for all of those innocent kids suffering. It is not their fault their parents are muslim.

That is amazing they saved the baby. There is no way I would bring kids in to the world if I lived over there. I realize it may not be the choice for some women but I would do everything I could to avoid it if I could. I do feel sorry for all of those innocent kids suffering. It is not their fault their parents are muslim.

All very true, but bringing them HERE when their parents ARE GOING TO RAISE THEM AS MUSLIM is going to cause a problem.....exascerbate existing problems with Muslims.